Oh that you would rend the heavens and come down, that the mountains might quake at your presence— as when fire kindles brushwood and the fire causes water to boil— to make your name known to your adversaries, and that the nations might tremble at your presence! – Isaiah 64:1-2
I am not happy with the path taken by America in the last
hundred years, especially, perhaps the last thirty or so. My opinion is that our political choices are
a function of the state of our hearts, that the decline in our culture, our
decadence, our degeneracy arise from a lack of personal righteousness, not only in
the hearts of corrupt politicians and corporate CEOs but in the hearts of
Americans as a whole.
God is good, and He will give us what we want. Unfortunately we have chosen to follow after
wickedness and sow the seeds of destruction.
We will reap the same. One might
start to think that the fields are, indeed, these days, white unto harvest. I tell you, though, even now, God will hear
us if we cry out to Him.
Isaiah cried out to the Lord, asking Him to … rend the heavens and come down. I pray today that the Lord would come
down. I will not presume to tell Him how
to do that, but my study of the Bible makes me think that it is unlikely
(though not impossible) that He would rip a hole in the blue sky above
me.
And Jesus cried out again with a loud voice and yielded up his spirit. And behold, the curtain of the temple was torn in two, from top to bottom. And the earth shook, and the rocks were split. (Matthew 27:50-51)
The veil in the temple separated God from man. Man’s sinful nature, what we call “the flesh”
kept him isolated and unable to approach God.
When Christ, having taken on the nature of man in the Incarnation,
suffered in our place and died a sacrificial, atoning death, that separation
was ended. Isaiah’s prayer found its
ultimate fulfillment, its antitype. God
did come down, rending not the blue sky but the First Adam’s nature and
bursting forth in the Last Adam.
Why is there not revival in the Church today? Why does it seem that evil triumphs at every
turn, that we are ruled by the depraved and the godless? For one, perhaps, we have not because we ask
not. Instead of praying for God to come
down, we ask that we might go up.
Sometimes we pray for our leaders – as we should. We pray that godly men and women will be
elected to public office where they often become as corrupt as those around
them, if they were not already. We hope
to escape in the Rapture because we believe in that things are just going to
get worse and worse. Maybe they
are. But that is not our call. We are here.
And, from the Parable of the Talents, the Lord tells us, “Occupy till I come.” (Luke 19:13)
Take care of business.
We need to pray that God will come down. So, you ask, O, wise guy, if the Lord isn’t
going to rip the sky open, how is He going to come down? I’m glad you asked. He is going to rend something all right. Consider this verse: But we have this
treasure in jars of clay, to show that the surpassing power belongs to God and
not to us. (2 Corinthians 4:7)
The power and presence of God resides in His people, in you
and, ostensibly, in me. He is right
here, yet something is hindering Him, holding Him back. That something must be broken.
Remember Gideon and his Three Hundred:
And he divided the 300 men into three companies and put trumpets into the hands of all of them and empty jars, with torches inside the jars. … So Gideon and the hundred men who were with him came to the outskirts of the camp at the beginning of the middle watch, when they had just set the watch. And they blew the trumpets and smashed the jars that were in their hands. (Judges 7:16-19)
What did Jesus tell us?
We are the salt He uses to preserve the earth. We are the
light of the world (Matthew 5:13-16).
He says you don’t light a candle or a lamp and keep it hidden under a
basket or in a jar because you can’t see it.
This is what prayer will do.
It will break the jar. The reason
we do not have earth-shaking, nation-transforming revival is
because the torch is still in the jar.
If we are concerned about the world, if we are earnest in desiring
liberty and freedom for ourselves and our children and grandchildren, if our
hearts have been touched and burdened by the unrighteousness we see around us,
pray that God will break this jar of clay, these jars of clay and let there be
light.
3 comments:
Outstanding post, Dwaine!
God will certainly rend those spiritual barriers to help us, and I agree that we must do our part too. The Lord ain't gonna do everything for me, especially if I'm sleeping in or lollygagging too much, and the same is true for America citizens in general, and the same with citizens of every other country.
It can always be worse, too. As tough as this is now, it's nothing compared to what Greece is about to go through, and even they are better off than those poor souls being persecuted to death, be they Christian missionaries, Jews or any people who have a desire for truth, justice and freedom.
May God have mercy on us, and shed His grace on we.
I second Ben's comment. Well done, Dwaine.
We should turn to scripture and Christ's words especially in times like this; for guidance and consolation.
What is natural will grow, and what isn't, won't. Recalls the fig tree parables..
That's true, brothers. Thank you.
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